Weekend Box Office
1)
The Dark Knight $155 million
2)
Mamma Mia! $27.6 million
3)
Hancock $14 million
4)
Journey to the Center of the Earth $11.9 million
5)
Hellboy II: The Golden Army $10 million
6)
WALL-E $9.8 million
7)
Space Chimps $7.3 million
8)
Wanted $5 million
9)
Get Smart $4 million
10)
Kung Fu Panda $1.7 million
Holy Cash Cow,
Batman! Christmas came early for Warner Brothers this year, and it looks like it won't matter if they have another hit until at least 2012. Chris Nolan's sequel to
Batman Begins has smashed every record in sight, hitting with a $155 million debut and taking that top spot on the weekend charts for what could be weeks to come. After just three days in release,
The Dark Knight is already shaping up to be the biggest movie event of the year.
Opening in second place was the musical
Mamma Mia!, which nabbed a nice little take of $27.6 million. That's no where near the behemoth earnings of
The Dark Knight, but it is the biggest opening in history for a musical, besting last year's
Hairspray by a little more than a million dollars.
This week's other new wide release was the CGI animated adventure
Space Chimps. It floundered into seventh place with a weak take of $7.3 million. That measly sum wasn't even enough to beat
WALL-E, which took the sixth place spot with $9.8 million after four weeks in release.
As for smaller films this week,
Transsiberian took in $35,200 on just two screens, which adds up to a $17,600 per screen average. That puts it in second place behind
The Dark Knight in per screen averages, "with
Batman hauling away $35,579 for every single screen it played on.
Lou Reed's Berlin didn't fair quite as well. It only managed to earn $7,650 on its two screens.
Next week will most likely see
The Dark Knight back into that top position for a second week in a row. Opening against it will be
The X-Files: I Want to Believe, the comedy
Step Brothers, the documentary
American Teen, and the Oscar worthy drama
Brideshead Revisited.
96 Comments
Some people just think of joker as a cool bad guy adn not that he has always been more a manifestation Batman's own worst fears about his role as a hero reflected back at him as a nightmare embodied by the Joker
"you complete me"
This is the final from today's Mojo.
Spoilers... sorta
markdchapman, I agree, the movie was alot longer than I would have expected, but it was entertaining the entire time (I think alot of people would agree). I also agree that I was surprised that Two Face was not save for the third movie, but I think it fit the theme of the movie very well. Besides, I don't think Nolan was anticipating Ledger's death, and had high hopes of a return of the Joker. Oh, and yes, Spiderman 3 was horrible... nuff said.